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Posts Tagged ‘fey’

Cover for Seanan McGuire's Late EclipsesMarch 1st

Two of my all-time favorite urban fantasy series release their latest installments!

Seanan McGuire‘s Late Eclipses.  Toby Daye gets in trouble, yells, curses and bleeds.   Faeries are snarky and scary.  Yay, faeries!  (Also, Seanan’s posting some really fun/informative lists on her blog as she prepares for the book release.)

Patricia Briggs‘s River Marked.  Mercy Thompson gets in trouble, yells, fixes some things and breaks others.  She gets yelled at by werewolves.  Yay, werewolves!

Cover for Patricia Briggs's book River MarkedMarch 4

By the end of the day, I’ll have finished off all my tests for the week.

The end of the day also marks the beginning of the first real break of the semester.

I get to go home, where my copies of Late Eclipses and River Marked await me.

I have a week to read whatever the hell I want.

I have a week to sleep.

And I have a week where I get to eat food that someone else cooked – or at least raid a well-stocked kitchen.

 

In other news…

I’ve started and caught up on a whole ton of webcomics since my last post, but I feel that dumping a bunch of links with no reason or rhyme is unfair to the stories and their creators.  So for now I’ll just link to two of them.

Free Mars, written by Dave Pauwels and art by Nicolas R. Giacondino.  I think it was originally called The Sisters Grim.  Mars is colonized and the militant government is upsetting some people.   There’s an attempt at revolution.  An all-girls band gets caught in the crossfire.  Good art, good story and developing characters.

FreakAngels, written by Warren Ellis (yes, that one) and art by Paul Duffield.   This is amazing.  Yes, I am late to the party on this one (when am I not?) but I’m glad I had the chance to read so much of it at once.  The art is gorgeous, the story is complicated, the themes are clear without necessarily reflecting a definite opinion, and the characters are well-written.   In the two evening it took me to get through the archives, I quoted bits of dialog to my roommate…  Well, I lost count.  Also, our neighbors are probably really nervous right now.

Everyone’s busy this weekend, so I suppose I’ll spend the time alternately sleeping and gorging on media.

Gleefully,

Phantastic Student

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Cover of Patricia Briggs's book Silver BorneJust finished Silver Borne, the latest installment of the Mercy Thompson series by Patricia Briggs.  It’s yet another wonderful installment of the series, this particular book focusing on issues with the fae, and with Mercy’s new pack-b0nds.  I liked it better than the last book, Bone Crossed, for the simple fact that I barely remember the contents of BC, but Silver Borne is going to stick with me as well as the first three novels.

For the purposes of full disclosure, I feel that I should warn everyone that this is one of my all-time favorite urban fantasy series and the series that introduced me to UF as a genre.  I won’t claim that it’s particularly literary, because it isn’t, but I can say that it is an amazing series.  The world-building/updating is amazing, and the characters are easy to connect to, despite the fact that most of them are some supernatural Other.  They still have a lot of the same issues as the rest of us, and their problems with the Other are believable.  Also, this series isn’t half as racy as a lot of other UF series tend to be, which I view as a good thing.

One the reasons I adore this series is because the secondary characters keep coming back and the author never stops developing them (including my favorite character, who I won’t name for the sake of anyone who hasn’t read this series yet).

Another reason I like it is because this particular UF world, in addition to having the usual vampire and werewolf citizens, also has the fae and other, non-were, shapeshifters.  Plus it has the distinction of being one of relatively few series in which the everyday human is aware, at least partly, of the supernatural element of the world around them.

Cover of Patricia Briggs's book Cry WolfA spin-off series featuring the Marrock’s son, Charles, and his Omega mate Anna is also available (the first books is called Cry Wolf).  This series looks more closely at the structure of werewolf society and is still very good.  It has a different feel than the Mercy Thompson books, with romance taking center stage, rather than being a subplot, and therefore isn’t quite as high on my list as the Mercy Thompson series.

Briggs also has a graphic novel prequel to the Mercy Thompson series called Homecoming, which depicts the events of Mercy’s first visit to the Tri-Cities and her meeting with Adam Hauptman and his pack.   More graphic novels, based on both series,  are on the way.

I highly recommend the Mercy Thompson series to anyone who enjoys UF featuring werewolves and fae (the vampires aren’t in the forefront here), or UF with strong character.  Hell, I recommend this series to anyone who wants to give UF a shot but is wary of detective-centric UF and the racier stuff.

Happy reading,

Phantastic Student

Cover of Patricia Briggs's book Moon Called Cover of Patricia Briggs's book Blood Bound Cover of Patricia Briggs's book Iron Kissed
Cover of Patricia Briggs's book Bone Crossed Cover of Patricia Briggs's book Silver Borne Cover for Patricia Briggs's book River Marked

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I’ve been bouncing up and down waiting for the third book in Seanan McGuire‘s October Daye series since I finished reading the second book, A Local Habitation, back in March. I pre-ordered An Artificial Night
but didn’t receive it until Thursday. I promptly stayed up reading it too late, went to bed, got up early to read it some more, and read it every moment that I wasn’t in class or at work. I finished it about twenty minutes ago and I can assure everyone that it was worth the wait.

I know I’ve mentioned the October Daye series before. It’s hard-boiled urban fantasy starring a half-fae detective. The first book was dark (well, I did call the series hard-boiled), with the sensuous imagery and twisting plot that you expect in hard-boiled detective fiction. The magic not only fit in brilliantly (with McGuire referring to fairy tales, nursery rhymes and folklore both well-known and obscure) but was a necessary, living part of the world rather than something tacked on for marketing purposes. It was edgy, gritty and frankly I found myself whining to my mom because I can’t write anything that dark and beautiful.

The second book, A Local Habitation, wasn’t as awesome as the first. It was still dark and gritty, still showing a beautifully broken protagonist trying to find her place in a world that’s moved on without her, but it was missing something. It didn’t have that distinct edge that made Rosemary and Rue to memorable. I didn’t mind this overmuch because some of my favorite minor characters from the first book got more screen time (what do you call it in books, anyway?) and because we were given a better background of the world the characters inhabit.

An Artificial Night took the background from the second book, used it and added to it. It took the toughness, grittiness and heartbreak from the first book and compounded it. It took the best of both books, used it and made it better. It totally kicked ass. McGuire’s hit her stride and is going to keep going. Reading the preview to the next book, Late Eclipses (due out in March of next year) I have faith that the author will keep going, building on what she’s got and making the series better with every installment. And I can’t wait to be along for the ride.

I want to list all the great things about this book. I want to tell you what fairy tales and nursery rhymes come into play and how beautifully they fit. I want to tell you what happens to our heroine and everyone else. I want to tell you how freaking amazing this book is. But I can’t because that would ruin it for you and no one deserves that. All I can say is that if you’ve read the other two books in the series you should run out and buy this one. Now. If you haven’t read any of the October Daye books yet you need to go out and buy them, check them out from the library, whatever. They’re worth reading. Urban fantasy not your cup of coffee? That’s fine. Buy the books for someone who does like them. Support this author, because she’s brilliant and we need to see more of her work.

Open roads and kind fires,
Phantastic Student

 

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